Food

How to Make a Simple Roast Chicken, According to a French Mom

Like little black dresses, you can never have too many roast chicken recipes. Especially the French kind.

So, when Florence Chapgier, a Paris-born reader living in Los Angeles, emailed me this recipe from her French mother, Christiane Baumgartner, for roast chicken with tarragon, butter and Cognac, I immediately gave it a try.

Ms. Chapgier’s name for the dish, “French roast chicken,” coveys its origin but not its distinctiveness.


Recipe: Roast Tarragon-Cognac Chicken


The brilliance of the recipe is the alchemy between copious amounts of butter as it mingles with caramelized chicken juices, an entire bunch of fresh, licorice-y tarragon and a heady dash of Cognac.

The dish has so few ingredients that Ms. Chapgier recommends seeking out high-quality ones — a cornfed chicken (“like in the Southwest of France”), lavish V.S.O.P. Cognac (“you don’t use that much”) and nubby, mineral-rich gray sea salt. I tested the recipe with a regular chicken, California brandy and kosher salt from my local supermarket, and it was still utterly phenomenal. So, use the best ingredients you can manage, but don’t sweat it.

The butter, tarragon, some Cognac and pepper are mixed together.Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
The mixture is then slathered all over the chicken.Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

The roasting technique itself could hardly be simpler: Salt the bird, let the skin dry out a bit, then coat it with softened butter and tarragon, and roast at 400 degrees. When the chicken is cooked through, turn off the heat and baste with the Cognac and pan juices. Let it rest for 10 minutes in the cooling oven to absorb all the flavors, then carve, douse the meat and bronzed skin with plenty of buttery, schmaltzy, herby drippings, and serve.

A bit more Cognac is added before the bird is returned to a turned-off oven.Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

Ms. Chapgier did have a note about adding the Cognac. Turn off the heat before returning the booze-basted bird to the oven. The one time she forgot, the intense heat set the Cognac on fire and cracked the glass in her oven door. (“That was a surprise,” she wrote.) This French bird, unlike coq au vin, is not improved by flambéing.

To round out the meal in the most classically French way, serve this with potatoes — roasted, fried, gratinéed or, best of all, mashed or puréed — so they can absorb every drop of the fragrant sauce. A bed of soft polenta is a less traditional but just as delectable alternative. Add a crisp green salad and nice bottle of wine, et voilà.

With roast chickens, as with little black dresses, simplicity is sophistication — and in this case, makes for a stunning meal.

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